England set the stage alight with record batting performance; beat SL in opener

The ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 is bigger and bolder than ever, and hosts England fashioned a blockbuster start, piling on a tournament high of 219/1 in the opening match against Sri Lanka in Edgbaston on Friday.

By doing so, England overhauled their own record of 213/5 set against Pakistan in 2023.

It was Danni Wyatt-Hodge who set the ball rolling with an unbeaten 105. Carrying that confidence in the field, England dismissed Sri Lanka for 132 for a statement 87-run win.

Nat Sciver-Brunt’s side is not just grappling with the pressure of playing a home World Cup, but also have history to contend with – England women’s team have never lost a World Cup they have hosted, either ODI or T20I.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka are chasing their first title at the World Cup.

After being put into bat, England started cautiously, hitting the accelerator just before the end of the powerplay to score 51/0 in the first six overs. A 135-run opening wicket partnership between Amy Jones (53) and Wyatt-Hodge gave them the perfect launchpad. They kept pressing the advantage, making sure they got the quick ones and twos even though the boundaries flowed easily.

It has been a life-changing month for Wyatt-Hodge, whose partner Georgie gave birth to their first child on 20 May. Just a few days later, she came out to score the opening hundred of the World Cup, seventh in the tournament’s history and only the second by an English woman.

She made the most of the width afforded to her. Wyatt-Hodge brought up the milestone with a sweep for four and put an exclamation on a historic innings for England with another boundary on the final ball.

That meant England scored 26 runs from the final over. Carrying her bat through, Wyatt-Hodge ended at 105 off 62, with the help of 13 fours and a six.

Jones was a tad lucky as she was dropped on 12 and then again on 48. She brought up her seventh half-century in T20Is, scoring 53 off 38.

Sri Lanka struggled to hit the spots with the ball and were sloppy in field as well. They finally got a breakthrough in the 14th over as Jones mistimed a delivery by Malki Madara and ended up spooning a catch to Chamari Athapaththu at mid-off.

However, that didn’t halt the English juggernaut. Skipper Nat Sciver-Brunt, who has recently recovered from injury, played with conviction and innovation to score 46 off 22.

Chasing a record target, Sri Lanka never really got going. Talismanic skipper Athapaththu fell for four in the fourth over, courtesy an incredible catch from wicketkeeper Wyatt-Hodge off Charlie Dean, and Sri Lanka slipped to 39/3 in the powerplay.

The only glimmer of hope was Harshitha Samarawickrama, who struck three fours and a six for 29. But Freya Kemp snuffed out the danger, as she got the ball to straighten and get past Samarawickrama’s defence.

Left-arm pacer Kemp, on a hat-trick at one point, impressed with her intelligent change-ups and finished with 4/22 in her four overs.

Lower down the order, Nilakshika Silva came up with a gritty 39, the highest score for Sri Lanka on the day, but it was too little too late.

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